Just curious what issues you encounter or if it’s reproducible. I personally haven’t had any issues with 4K nor HDR content on my TV when sent from the Apple TV 4K, but I also just purchased a new home the theatre system (to be installed in a few weeks) so now I’m worried. Haha.

See, I respectfully disagree. If it’s only a month or two (that’s really not that long in my opinion), it’s still easy to export the data from your bank account and import into YNAB, spend maybe a half hour categorizing and stuff, and you then won’t lose any real data that’s so useful (basically data is the most useful part of YNAB as that data is what allows for all the reports to do their magic for us to then use and learn from). If it’s several months that may be a different scenario where a fresh start is more warranted. Just my two cents, but I always try to prioritize having useful data over small inconvenience if it’s not much of a hassle to do.

Update: I have found that it seems to do the attachments.plist only when the file has been edited before hand in Photos app. So if you take a fresh photo and don’t touch it in any way, it’ll load fine in 1P. If you take a photo, however, and edit it’s brightness or something then save and upload into 1P, the defect occurs.

Ditto, I just assumed it was monitoring all usernames in the email address format. Much less useful now that I know it's only monitoring the one I signed up to 1P with. :-( Hopefully that gets improved. It'd be ideal to monitor all usernames in an email address format.
Edit: The reason it was far less useful for me in this case under this situation is because I registered my email with 1P in the aliasing format where you have a plus-sign, so it'd be like [example+1Password@example.com](mailto:example+1Password@example.com) so of course it would be unique and wouldn't be found anywhere else, thus the very limited use of this feature in that case, at least when it comes to monitoring email addresses in data leaks.

Most people are helpful people but there’s only so much that can be done for people who don’t want help too. I see where my view of your statement was maybe different than you intended but the fact you have negative fifteen karma right now on it makes me think others may have viewed it similarly as I did. Because if I looked at it the he way you’re now explaining it, I’d absolutely have upvoted it as I agree with you as you’ve explained your comment now.

Oh totally, and I never said otherwise. But your response to the user who suggested how difficult it’d be to check on absolutely everybody laying on a street when you’re in a place full of drug addicts in Vancouver was that if everyone did it then he wouldn’t have to. But that doesn’t make any sense because if everyone had that mindset then nobody would do it as they’d think someone else already did. Much like the bystander effect. That’s what I’m saying... your solution to that user wasn’t really making sense.

That’s one thing that bugs me about YNAB as a business, they don’t quite understand “feature parity”. So many missing things from the mobile app, even the basics like adjusting an account balance. And the missing spending report in the mobile app too which would seem to me like the most important report to have on the go. Lol. But with that aside, my rant is over, because in the end I do love YNAB, the interface is second to none in my experience of other budget apps.

Safari seems to be better at respecting privacy (though Firefox is good for that too), but for users in the Apple ecosystem it also is what most people use since bookmarks are automatically synced with Safari on iOS and iPadOS thanks to iCloud, also some users who use the Apple Keychain passwords to keep passwords will want to continue using Safari. It’s not that it’s necessarily a better browser but it has a lot of convenience factors to users who have multiple Apple devices. I don’t want to have to use another browser (ideally) just for this one piece of functionality. But of course I can understand it it’s a low priority.